in 200 years rats in lab coats will be cloning humans to populate their zoos
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in 200 years rats in lab coats will be cloning humans to populate their zoos
^ I think you posted in the thread before. You studied evolution or something? Thats dope.
What were you studying then?
After studying the wutang double cd i began to wonder if T=Rex could have glided at one point. Those legs in proportion of body looking like they were spring loaded for jumping and the tail looks very balance oriented like a squirrel cause of proportion. What if trex our jump and gilde a little like a flying squirrel. Especially with the feathers?
I have NO knowledge on this out of being interested in the 4th grade, the wutang double CD and procrastinating a very involved video project.
T-Rex had tiny arms in proportion to its body, no way could it glide, it would need a huge wingspan. If a T-Rex could fly, then humans should be able to.
Not going to pretend I understand any of this but:
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aat4269
Singing like Killah priest song 'Your arms too short to bop your hog!'
Jurassic Park franchise refuses to put feathers on the T-Rex and other coelurosaurs such as the velociraptor.
Is it due to movie franchise recognizability?
Feathers can't be more difficult to animate, although maybe animated movement might be more expensive (more 'shots' for moving feathers - I'm reminded of Ariel's hair underwater and how it was seen as both revolutionar and expensive when the animators made the hair flow underwater)
feathers would have given the new toy line an edge too, in that the new line would be different from the older ones, making it interesting for both kids and collectors
some pros and cons, just thinking out loud here
The Raptors in JP3 had feathers. Something like a T Rex might not have had many feathers anyway.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nyt...story.amp.html
fuck's sake zooruka it was only one of the biggest discoveries a few years ago
full background info
https://www.britannica.com/story/did...-have-feathers
They did. Evolution. Post Late Cretaceous was the Paleogene Period (66 myo - 26 myo I believe) contained large flightless birds such as the Gastornis. Also, after the Deccan traps and the meteorite that killed the age of the dinosaurs, Cenozoic Era (age of the mammals) atmospheric conditions are a lot different than in the Mesozoic Era that contained larger animals due to high pressure and higher temperatures.
Then again, theropods have evolved into some strange modern day birds. Chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese.
Larger animals needed a lot of food to survive, the bigger dinosaurs couldn't make it but smaller therapods survived and evolved into birds.
They did some selective gene editing and gave a chicken teeth a few years ago.
^you guys are the biggest needs ever. Dinosaurs? Really, our we in 2nd grade again.
This site is full of dinosaurs already